CA2046057A1 - Copy-invalidating document - Google Patents

Copy-invalidating document

Info

Publication number
CA2046057A1
CA2046057A1 CA002046057A CA2046057A CA2046057A1 CA 2046057 A1 CA2046057 A1 CA 2046057A1 CA 002046057 A CA002046057 A CA 002046057A CA 2046057 A CA2046057 A CA 2046057A CA 2046057 A1 CA2046057 A1 CA 2046057A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
indicia
printed
screen value
substrate
document according
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA002046057A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Joseph E. Orndorff
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Invisible Images Inc
Original Assignee
Invisible Images Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Invisible Images Inc filed Critical Invisible Images Inc
Publication of CA2046057A1 publication Critical patent/CA2046057A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03CPHOTOSENSITIVE MATERIALS FOR PHOTOGRAPHIC PURPOSES; PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES, e.g. CINE, X-RAY, COLOUR, STEREO-PHOTOGRAPHIC PROCESSES; AUXILIARY PROCESSES IN PHOTOGRAPHY
    • G03C5/00Photographic processes or agents therefor; Regeneration of such processing agents
    • G03C5/08Photoprinting; Processes and means for preventing photoprinting
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M3/00Printing processes to produce particular kinds of printed work, e.g. patterns
    • B41M3/14Security printing
    • B41M3/146Security printing using a non human-readable pattern which becomes visible on reproduction, e.g. a void mark
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G21/00Arrangements not provided for by groups G03G13/00 - G03G19/00, e.g. cleaning, elimination of residual charge
    • G03G21/04Preventing copies being made of an original
    • G03G21/043Preventing copies being made of an original by using an original which is not reproducible or only reproducible with a different appearence, e.g. originals with a photochromic layer or a colour background
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S283/00Printed matter
    • Y10S283/902Anti-photocopy
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10S428/916Fraud or tamper detecting

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • Cleaning In Electrography (AREA)
  • Credit Cards Or The Like (AREA)
  • Printing Methods (AREA)

Abstract

COPY-INVALIDATING DOCUMENT
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
The text discloses for use in printing valuable documents an allover pattern of warning indicia which is merged by human sensory perception with its background but is distinguished and reproduced by xero-graphic copying as a result of the employment of two different screen values for the indicia and the back-ground which are respectively within and beyond the reproductive capability of the copier machine when used in the stated context. Adjunctively, document valida-ting indicia are also printable on such documents in a screen value beyond the reproductive capability of xerographic copiers at the lighter settings at which the lesser screen value used for said warning indicia or background will reproduce.

Description

~ 0460~i7 ~1--COPY-INVALIDATING DOCUMENT
This invention relates to measures for detecting the unauthorized duplication of printed documents of value, such ac checks or other financial instrument6, stock certificates, coupons redeemable for value, academic transcripts, etc.
8ACKGROUND OF ~HE INVENTION
The advent of xerography, and particularly color xerography, has provided the unscrupulous with the means for unauthorized duplication of original documents for the purpose of passing them off, with or without alteration, as an original document of the same kind.
The problem is widespread, and well-known to the issuers of such original documentation, with the result that considerable attention has been given to ways and means to prevent the effective duplication of ~uch documents by color xerography.
Out of such development, it has become understood that xerographic copiers have a screen value, or dot frequency, threæhold above which the copier is unable to distinguish the individual elements of the dot pattern of halftone printing, and that, as to color xerography additionally, there are spectral ranges of color in which the reproductive capability of the copier is relatively impaired. These phenomena have been employed in various ways by those skillQd in the printing art to foil the unauthorized xerographic duplication of valuable documents by cau~ing invali-dating indicia of tampering, essentially latent to the naked eye looking at the original document without the aid of magnification, to appear boldly in the xerographic copy.
Although the phenomena which make this form of document protection possible are generally known, the problem faced by all such methodology is to produce indicia of tampering which are truly latent in the -~9L6~57
-2-original, even to the relatively low threshold of perception of the mere casual observer.
In most systems heretofore developed for the purpose, the indicia of tampering are printed in one dot S frequency or screen value and the background in another, and the indicia camouflaged either with an intermediate third dot frequency immediately 6urrounding the warning indicia, or with a covering overlay of extraneous pattern, intended to confuse the eye sufficiently to render the warning indicia indiscernible to ordinary observation. While straightforward encugh in concept, such systems tend to be complicated in execution, leaving a simpler but effective 6ystem to be desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention also iB based upon the printing of the warning indicia and the background in different screen values, one above and one below the dot-frequency thre6hold of a xerographic copier, but presents the warning indicia as a compact allover pattern which serves as its own camouflage.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention iB described in the following specification by reference to the accompanying drawinga, of which:
FIGURE 1 is a compact allover pattern of warning indicia, specifically based on the word "VOID";
FIGURE 2 represents a xerographic copy of an actual manufacturer's free-goods coupon utilizing the pattern of FIGURE 1: and FIGURE 3 is a much magnified fragmentary and diagrammatic representation of the original document of FIGURE 2, intended to illustrate the relative dot frequencies of the 6creen value6 in which the warning indicia and background are printed.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIGURE 1 of the drawings illustrates an overall pattern of warning indicia based upon the word 2Q~6(~

"VOID" and printed in 24 point bold capitals which have been compressed within the line~ from wha~ would be regarded as normal proportional 6pacing, and compressed as well from line to line from customary 6pacing of ~uccessive lines of type. The overall size and propor-tion of document cho6en for convenient illustration of the invention in FIGURES 1 and 2 is a co,mon wallet size of financial document or instrument handled by the consumer, being, for convenience sake, roughly the size of the paper currency of the United States of America.
It will be understood, however, that the invention is applicable equally to the protection of larger documents ussd for certificate~ of membership, ownership or debt, academic transcripts, etc., typically of letter-size and larger.
It should also be understood that while the word "VOID" has been chosen a~ the illustrative warning indicia, other words of warning are equally usable, the word "COPY" being preferred for some applications.
For illustrative purposes, FIGURE 1 6hows the warning indicia pattern a~ solid rather than halftone characters on a blank or white background, but it will be understood by those skilled in the art that both the characters constituting the warning indicia, and also the background against which they appear, are printed in halftone for the purposes of the invention, as illus-trated diagram~atically in FIGURE 3, to which detailed reference will shortly be made.
FIGURE 2 represents a xerographic copy of an actual manufacturer'6 coupQn upon which the warning indicia of FIGURE 1, normally indiscernible to the naked eye because of the sensory balance achieved between the warning indicia and the background again6t which they appear, have emerged boldly against a solid but lighter background. In the copy represented by FIGURE 2, the dot frequency with which the characters of the warning indicia are printed i6 within the reproductive 2Q41~(~5~

capability of the xerographic copier, whereas the background, printed with the same ink but with a dot frequency outside the reproductive capability of the copier, drops out because the resolution of the copier is inadequate to discriminate between the individual dots of the higher screen value selected for the background.
As will be noted from FIGURES 1 and 2, the warning indicia are preferably printed upon the usual paper substrate in line~ perpendicular to the clearly readable text and illustrations of the document in order to render the pattern less recognizable for what it is.
The FIGURE 3 diagram represents a much magnified fragment of the warning indicia pattern of FIGURE 1 as printed on the actual document of FIGURE 2.
It illustrates in exaggerated scale, the printing of the characters themselves at a ~creen value of 65 lines per lineal inch, nominal, i.e., 65 lines of dots per inch on mutually perpendicular axes, preferably but not necessarily turned 45 degrees from the line of type.
The background areas, in contra6t, namely, the areas not actually covered by the characters of the warning indicia, including the spaces within a~ well as between the individual character6 and between lines of charac-ters, are printed at double the pitch, i.e., at a screenvalue of 133 lines per lineal inch, nominal.
The screen patterns are preferably in line registry along both mutu~lly perpendicular axes. More-over, the style, size, and spacing of the type are selected for minimum disruption of the dot patterns or distortion of the individual dots, such as might re6ult either in discernible conflict, or in unprinted areas, at the edges of ~he characters. It will be observed, for example, referring to the ~tyle of type in the illustrative pattern, that the demarcation between the two dot frequencies i8 along a line of dots either on the two mutually perpendicular axes or along the 45 -5- 2046~5'7 degree diagonals in the case of the letters "0" and "D".
In the case of the letter "V", the lines of demarcation are aligned with dots along a secondary diagonal of the 65 line pattern with which the characters are printed, viz., at an angle of arc tangent 2 from one of the mutually perpendicular lines of dots, essentially without mutilation of any of the dots of the pattern.
It is believed that the indiscernibleness of the warning indicia to the naked eye may result from a combination of two effect , namely, a 6ensory balance of tonal values between the characters printed at 65 lines per inch and the background printed at 133 lines per inch, and the relative equality of areas occupied by the characters and their background resulting from the compression of the type. While it may not be possible to achieve precise geometric parity between the areas of the characters and the area of the background, an excellent result has been achieved ~n the preferred embodiment, constituting the warning HVOID" wherein it has been determined that the character6 occupy approxi-mately 53 percent of the total area occupied by a single repetitive increment. However, as those skilled in the printing art will understand, a sensory balance between the character6 and their background, ~uch as to cause them to merge indistinguishably, can be won or 108t by varying the supply of ink with which they are being printed. This effect i~ attributable to differential dot gain, i.e., the differsntial increa6e of ~rea between the dots of the two ~creen values employed, inasmuch as the individual dots of the finer mesh experience a larger percentage gain in printed area from a given increa e in the ink ~upply. It i6 accordingly believed that a skilled pre~sman, by variation of the ink 6upply, should be able to render the printed warning indicia indiscernible to the naked eye, if the characters of the overall pattern occupy within 40 to 6 percent of the area of substrate which they occupy in -6- ~0~6~
total, and if the tonal values of the two dot patterns on the printing plate are such a to give the pressman the control to be able to produce a product wherein the two dot patterns have approximately egual tone density.
In the illustrated ca6e, the ~arning indicia are revealed in FIGURE 2 as a positive image of a dot pattern against a solid background o~ lighter color, or no color, indicating failure of the copying machine to reproduce the background of the original. The reverse or "negative" effect is equally feasible, i.e., with the characters printed at a screen value above that of the reproductive limit of the machine, while the background is printed at the screen value which renders it distinguishable to, and therefore reproducible by, the xerographic copier.
Although the illustrative example of FIGURES 1 and 2 employs 24 point bold capitals, compressed, the invention is not limited to a particular type size, and may employ type of other 6izes within the criteria discovered to be enabling. In particular, while the use of the 65 dot screen value may pose practical lower limits of type size if the characters themselves are to be printed at that screen value, the use of type larger in size than 24 point i8 feasible as long as the area ratios of warning indicia to background are maintained.
No actual upper type size limit has been ascertained, but practicality will obviously dictate some relation to the size of the actual document in order to assure the sufficient recurrence of legible warning indicia in the xerographic copy. A compressed type warning indicia printed in 76 point bold characters has been e~ployed successfully in documents of conventional U.S. business document size, i.e., 8~ by 11 or 13 inches.
The phenomena involved in exposing by xerography images essentially latent in the original document are relatively independent of the color of the original. Good results have been obtained with dark _7_ 204G057 inks of blue, red, green, ~rown, and variants thereof, using the standard process inks. Where prese facilities or usage will accommodate nonstandard inks, the use of inks with black pigment in their formulations recommends itself inasmuch as such inks seem to enhance the latency of the image in the original. In either case, a good result has been achieved with plates made from film screens utilizing the 65 and 133 line combination at a density or nominal area coverage by the dots within the lo patterns within the range of 12 to 14 percent and 9 to 11 percent, respectively, measured on a MacBeth densito-meter. At these dot frequency and tone density values, together with the compress~on to the type of the warning indicia into approximate area parity with the back-ground, it is ~ell wi~hin the ability of the skilledpressman to achieve the sensory balance which allows the warning indicia visually to become one with the back-ground in an original document embodying this invention.
In a further aspect of the invention designed to protect the document against attempted copying at very light copier settings intended to cause the warning indicia themselves to drop out or disappear by 1088 of the larger dot print as well, document data essential to its validity are also printed in halftone, preferably at least of the pitch or dot frequency chosen, in the illustrated case, for the background between and within the characters of the warning indicia. These validating data, ~uch as the words "FREE", the legend "Manufac-turer's Coupon", and the expiration date seen in FIGUR~ 2, or at least some of them, are preferably isolated in an otherwise unprinted area of the 5ub-strate, where the person inspecting the document for validity cannot fail to notice the absence of essential data clearly legible on valid copy, and where, ~eing isolated, they may readily be printed in a color other than that used for the warning indicia patterns.

2046(~

In the printing of monocolor docu~ents, good results have been achieved by printing such essential data on an otherwise unprinted area of white or light-colored substrate with the ~creen value or pitch chosen for the background of the overall pattern of warning indicia, namely, in the illustrative example, a dot frequency of 133 lines per inch, nominal, at 10 percent tone density. This pitch may be increased, if desired, to 150 line~ per inch, for example, as additional protection against the reputedly greater resolving power of laser color copiers, but tests have shown that even the more ~ophisticated copiers in general use at the present time will, at lighter settings, "lose" the essential validating data printed in either 130 or 150 lines while the warning indicia at 65 lines are still legible.
The features of the invention believed new and patentable are set forth in the following claims.

Claims (10)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A printed document incorporating a latent image of indicia chosen to thwart reproduction of the document by xerographic copying by causing said latent image to reveal itself in xerographic copies of the document, comprising:
a printable substrate, a warning notice comprising selected cancel-lation indicia printed upon the substrate at a first screen value in an allover pattern of characters in the area of the substrate in which said indicia are employed, and a background printed upon the substrate at a second screen value in the portions of said area not occupied by the characters constituting said indicia, one of said first and second screen values being reproducible as a dot pattern by xerographic copiers and the other screen value being beyond the dot resolving power of such copiers in the aforesaid context.
2. A printed document according to Claim 1 wherein said allover pattern of characters is compressed to cover at least 40 percent of said area of the substrate.
3. A printed document according to Claims 1 or 2 wherein said first screen value is that screen value which is reproducible by xerographic copiers.
4. A printed document according to Claim 1 which incorporates visible type indicating normal reading orientation, and wherein said warning notice runs perpendicularly to the visible type appearing thereon.
5. A printed document according to Claim 1 wherein said first screen value is approximately 65 lines per inch and said second screen value is approxi-mately double the first with both dot patterns at approximately equal tone densities, and the characters are compressed within the line of type and between lines of type so as to occupy substantially half of said area of the substrate.
6. A printed document according to Claim 1 wherein said first screen value is approximately 65 lines per inch and said second screen value is approx-imately double the first with both dot patterns at approximately equal tone densities, the characters being printed in bold capitals of uniform size in the range of from 24 to 76 point compressed within the line of type and between lines of type so as to occupy substantially half of said area of the substrate.
7. A printed document according to Claim 1 having legible, validating indicia printed thereon in areas not occupied by said cancellation indicia, said validating indicia being printed at a screen value sufficiently greater than the lesser screen value of Claim 1 to cause the validating indicia to disappear from xerographic copies of said document at lighter machine settings at which said lesser screen value is reproduced.
8. A printed document according to Claim 7 wherein said validating indicia are printed upon a blank area of the substrate.
9. A printed document according to Claim 7 wherein said validating indicia are printed in a color different from that used for the cancellation indicia and their background.
10. A printed document according to Claim 9 wherein said validating indicia and said cancellation indicia are printed in the same color.
CA002046057A 1991-03-29 1991-07-02 Copy-invalidating document Abandoned CA2046057A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US677,151 1991-03-29
US07/677,151 US5171040A (en) 1991-03-29 1991-03-29 Copy-invalidating document

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2046057A1 true CA2046057A1 (en) 1992-09-30

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Family Applications (1)

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CA002046057A Abandoned CA2046057A1 (en) 1991-03-29 1991-07-02 Copy-invalidating document

Country Status (2)

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US (1) US5171040A (en)
CA (1) CA2046057A1 (en)

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